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Abbey of Masevaux à Masevaux dans le Haut-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye

Abbey of Masevaux

    9 Place des Alliés
    68290 Masevaux-Niederbruck
Ownership of the municipality
Abbaye de Masevaux
Abbaye de Masevaux
Abbaye de Masevaux
Abbaye de Masevaux
Abbaye de Masevaux
Abbaye de Masevaux
Abbaye de Masevaux
Crédit photo : Rauenstein - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
700
800
1300
1400
1700
1800
1900
2000
720–780
Foundation of the first church
1353
Reconstruction of the choir
1780–1790
Construction of canonesse houses
1798
Sale of abbey property
1859
Fire of the nave
1898
Classification of the chapel
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The chapel: classification by decree of 6 December 1898

Key figures

Prince Mason - Legendary Founder Brother of Count Eberhard of Murbach.
François-Martin Burger - Architect Manufacturer of canonesse houses.
Jean-Baptiste Kléber - Architect Collaborator Directed the work in 1781.
Abbesse anonyme (1780) - Construction Sponsor Launched the project of the nine houses.
Nicolas Koechlin - Mulhusian industrial Aceta gardens and commons in the 19th century.

Origin and history

Masevaux Abbey, located in Masevaux-Niederbruck in the Upper Rhine, was founded according to tradition by Prince Mason, brother of Count Eberhard, founder of Murbach Abbey. Initially a Benedictine monastery, it quickly became a chapter of noble ladies led by an abbess. The first church, built between 720 and 780, was replaced by a Romanesque church, and the choir was rebuilt in the 14th century (from 1353).

In 1780, the abbesse launched the construction of nine houses for the canonesses, a project designed by François-Martin Burger and Jean-Baptiste Kléber. Seven houses were completed before the Revolution stopped work in 1790. The abbey's property was sold in 1798, and the abbey church became parish church before being partially destroyed by fire in 1859. The choir, restored in 1881, served as a cantonal court and now houses administrative offices.

Conventual buildings, including the 18th century remodeled abbess house, were partly preserved. Some decorative elements, such as carved panels, were moved after the Revolution to the Abbatial Church or the Mulhouse Museum. The abbey thus illustrates the architectural and social transformations linked to political and industrial revolutions, with successive reallocations of its spaces.

The chapel, classified as a historical monument in 1898, is the only remaining protected element. Other parts, such as the canonesses' houses or the abbey estate (former home converted into a textile factory in the 19th century), are now occupied by housing or businesses. The bust-reliquary of Saint Léger, an emblem of the abbey, was carried away in 1790 in Fribourg-en-Brisgau, then in Lucerne, Switzerland.

The history of the abbey reflects the religious and political upheavals of Alsace, from its medieval foundation to its secularization during the Revolution. The current remains, though fragmentary, bear witness to its past importance as a spiritual and seigneurial centre, before its conversion into a civil and economic space.

External links